When we talk about smoking and its impact on Australian health, the statistics are already confronting. But within Indigenous communities, the issue is even more complex, rooted in a layered history of colonisation, cultural change, and modern health disparities. Understanding how smoking came to be such a significant issue among Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples means taking a step back through history, and also looking forward to the innovative solutions being led by Indigenous voices today.
Smoking Wasn’t Always Part of Indigenous Life
Before British colonisation, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples had no access to tobacco. However, that doesn’t mean the act of smoking was completely absent. Some communities used native plants, such as pituri in Central Australia, in ceremonial or medicinal contexts. These plants were often chewed or used in ways tied closely to cultural practices and did not involve the same harms as commercial tobacco.
The arrival of British settlers in 1788 marked a turning point. Tobacco was introduced alongside alcohol and sugar as part of trade, rations, and control. In fact, throughout much of the 19th and 20th centuries, tobacco was distributed as payment for labour, particularly on missions and pastoral stations. This not only established a dependency on nicotine but also ingrained tobacco into social and economic life within many Indigenous communities.
A Public Health Crisis Built Over Generations
Today, the legacy of this forced introduction of tobacco continues to affect Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander health. According to the Australian Bureau of Statistics, around 40% of Indigenous Australians aged 15 and over are current daily smokers, compared to 11% of the general population. In some remote communities, that figure is much higher.
The impact is devastating. Smoking is the leading cause of preventable death among Indigenous Australians, responsible for around 37% of deaths in this population, based on findings from the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare. Lung cancer, cardiovascular disease, and respiratory illnesses are all made worse by high smoking rates.
What makes this even more tragic is that many Indigenous Australians take up smoking at a young age, often influenced by the normalisation of smoking within family and community settings, combined with stress, trauma, and socio-economic disadvantage.
Tackling Smoking the Indigenous Way
The good news? Progress is happening, and it’s being driven by Indigenous communities themselves.
Programs like Tackling Indigenous Smoking (TIS) are showing real promise. Led by Aboriginal organisations across the country, TIS focuses on community-based, culturally appropriate strategies to help reduce smoking rates. That includes everything from school programs and sporting club initiatives to local media campaigns and culturally safe quit support.